1 / 22

John Bowlby: Understanding his shadow

John Bowlby: Understanding his shadow. …or, Why I dig Bowlby . Daniel Berry Harvard Graduate School of Education November 18, 2005. Attachment Theory: Preface. Bowlby didn’t do it alone…. Mary Ainsworth Long-time colleague

alaula
Download Presentation

John Bowlby: Understanding his shadow

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. John Bowlby: Understanding his shadow …or, Why I dig Bowlby Daniel BerryHarvard Graduate School of Education November 18, 2005

  2. Attachment Theory: Preface • Bowlby didn’t do it alone… • Mary Ainsworth • Long-time colleague • Developed the first Attachment measure (i.e., the Strange Situation) • Her original ideas tightened many of Bowlby’s thoughts, particularly in regard to maternal sensitivity.

  3. Attachment Theory: The basics… • Attachment: The enduring deep emotional bond between a child and a specific caregiver • Endogenous attachment system within child, selected in the course of evolution

  4. Please memorize this very important model now. Bischof’s (1975) General systems framework for attachment behavior.

  5. Attachment Theory: The basics… • Attachment: The enduring deep emotional bond between a child and a specific caregiver • Endogenous attachment system within child, selected in the course of evolution • Over time, interactions with caregiver facilitate an internal working model (IWM) of the relationship. • In turn, the IWM shapes the way children explore and interpret their worlds.

  6. Bowlby: The beginning • Edward John Mostyn Bowlby born in London on Feb. 26, 1907 to Sir Major-General Anthony and Mrs. May Bowlby • His father was an eminent surgeon, war hero, and personal physician to King Edward • His mother was raised in an upper-middle class family • The Bowlby’s enjoyed a comfortable, Edwardian, upper-class lifestyle

  7. Bowlby: Early life • John is one of six children and quite close his brother Anthony, 13-months his elder • Typical family-life for their time and class: Raised by nannies, little contact with mom, and less with dad • At age 9, Bowlby and Anthony sent to boarding school (Lindisfarne). Bowlby’s opinion of boarding school: “…would not send a dog to boarding school at that age”

  8. Bowlby: The academic spark • After short-stint in naval college, Bowlby heads to Trinity College, Cambridge • Enters as a med-student, concentrating on both natural sciences and the moral sciences (philosophy and psychology) • Finds himself drawn to psychology, which was largely dominated by Freudian thinking

  9. Bowlby: The personal spark • Bowlby graduates and works in two progressive schools, Bedales and Priory Gate. • His interactions with children serve as the first spark for the notions of “separation” that would become Attachment Theory.

  10. Bowlby: Finding himself • Med-School • Psychoanalytic Training – • PhD and work with the (in)famous Cyril Burt • The dissonance continues…

  11. Bowlby Fun-Fact!!! Amaze your Friends!!!! • In Med-School Bowlby opened a Sandwich shop called Bogey’s Bar!

  12. Bowlby: Tavistock • WW II begins, Bowlby serves as Army psychiatrist • Colleagues he meets during this time become the “invisible college” • Operation Phoenix and the Tavistock Clinic

  13. Bowlby Fun-Fact!!! Knowledge that will make you more attractive!!! • John Bell, one of the first family therapists, devises a entire mode of therapy based on a mistaken understanding of Bowlby’s methods

  14. Bowlby: Tavistock’s Dual-Mission • Bowlby is deep in his clinical work, but firmly agrees with the clinic’s creed, “No research without therapy; and no therapy without research” • The Separation Research Unit • The World Health Organization Report

  15. Quick summary: • Bowlby as a kid who experiences separation with caregivers • Bowlby as a student who gets interested in child psychology through Freudian thinking • Bowlby as a teacher who notices the effect of separation on his students development • Bowlby as a psychoanalyst challenging some of the Freudian dogma • Bowlby as a researcher pursuing his interest in separation and pathology, yet still explaining mechanisms in Freudian terms

  16. Bowlby: Birth of the cool • Bowlby discovers ethology • Raises the question of whether the formation of bonds between infants and caregivers is a product of evolution • If so, what might this species-specific system look like?

  17. Bowlby’s Attachment & Loss Trilogy • Bowlby compiles both his and Ainsworth’s work on attachment into a grand theory of socio-emotional development • The theory was published across three volumes 1. Attachment (1969); 2. Separation (1973); and 3. Loss (1983)

  18. Bowlby’s Attachment & Loss Trilogy • Humans genetically predisposed to actively construct attachment relationships • Attachment relationships are adaptive in that they facilitate a cognitive model based on ones’ specific ecological context • This adaptation to specific environments has survival value for individuals • Internal models serve as an adaptive guide for navigating the social world and, therefore, affect long-term developmental directories

  19. Should we buy it? • Evolutionary arguments are hard to substantiate without archeological evidence… • Non-human primate and behavioral genetic research, does not contradict an evolutionary argument for attachment • Early attachment has been linked to a wide array of developmental outcomes (i.e., achievement and socio-emotional)

  20. Why should educators care? • Children learn in social contexts • They bring their attachment histories with them and, in turn, these influence the way children form new relationships with teachers and peers • Understanding these individual differences allows educators support children’s learning

  21. Bowlby loved education! • “It is impossible to estimate the scope and value of work in education, work that has been touched on by most geniuses and has been taken for granted by fools.”

  22. References: Ainsworth, M. & Bowlby, J. (1991). An ethological approach to personality development. American Psychologist, 46(4), 333-341. Bowlby, J. (1951). Maternal care and mental health. Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization. Bowlby, J. (1969). Attachment and loss: Vol. 1.Attachment. New York: Basic Books. Bowlby, J. (1973). Attachment and loss: Vol. 2.Separation: Anxiety and anger. New York: Basic Bowlby, J. (1980). Attachment and loss: Vol. 3 Loss: Sadness and depression. New York: Basic Books. Holmes, J. (1993). John Bowlby and attachment theory. London: Routledge. van Dijken, S. (1998). John Bowlby: His early life—a biographical journey into the roots of Attachment Theory. New York: Free Association books.

More Related